Thursday, April 5,1990 The Battalion Page 7 WiRRD by Scott McCullar © 1990 ONLY THE BATmiOA/ HAS 5/l.LY OC CARTOON IS MCCULLAR, ANV oNLl W CAN REAP HIS Kl WARFEP THOUGHTS oN THE WORtP. WHETHER IT'S MAKING FUN OF 7HE BoARD OF OR OF HIS &NN STOP Ip STRIP, SCOTT'S YOUR T SCOTT P1CULOUS regents. cartoonist. ANV YOU CAN TRUST SCOTT TO STICK TO HI characters to express anp promote him TO RIP OFFj PERVERT OR CHEAPEN A NOTH ft CHARACTERS FOR H/S ONN SELFISH PvRPOS 5 ONN CARTOON SELF, ANP NOT R STRIP'S ES. UKE VOZENS OF CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS VO. WALDO By KEVIN THOMAS 50RLY, I COULDN'T Y HEY, I'M A BELIEVE YOU \ GHOST/ 1 TALKED THAT EVIL / KNOW ABOUT DEMONESS OUT OF/ THESE MARRYING ME! Y THINGS.' DID YOU HEAR THAT SHE FOUND SOMEONE ELSE TO MARRT? GEE... IT'D TAKE SOMEONE WITH A HEART OF STONE TO DO THAT... \ A- £Y ,0- ..CONTmPLATidb HIS NEW,Cute, Fbw To REMEMBER NAME. Http Hqwvlsf; l CbthH) No m'Titer How You bAY it, ITS STILL "BSIRKMULCH" Come and get it! Insect dishes ‘taste great...quite nutritious’ Going 70 Summer School? w hy Not Live On-Campus? rt S NKo^\e'- \\s \\:s O^ X0L I TS NEVER TOO LATP Tr» Ann PRIVATE ROOMS ARE AVAILABLE All room assignments are done on a first-come-first serve basis! For more information contact the housing office Room 101 YMCA Phone 845-4744 AGGIE SPECIAL 12" medium original style pizza with 1 item $5.49 Expires 4/30/90 Tax not included in price. One coupon per pizza. _ © Limited delivery areas ensure safe driving. ^ 260-9020 4407 S. Texas 693-2335 1504 Holleman 822-7373 Townshire Shopping Center • o 5< 1511 IT’S TIME FOR DOMINO’S PIZZA’." Moving Out? Don’t Let YOUR Deposit Become FREE Money for your Manager Submit Youb 30-Day Notice Of Intent to Vacate TODAY! Brought to you by Off Campus Aggies and the Off Campus Center. 7WA//J 2 Weeks Unlimited Tanning $21.00 846-6843 Northgate > Something for those of you who aren’t taking Kaplan Prep 1M We’ve produced more top scores on the LSAT, GMAT, GRE and MCAT than all other courses combined. Which means if you’re not taking Kaplan Prep™ you may need to take more than a #2 pencil to the test. STANLEY H. KAPLAN Take Kaplan Or Take Your Chances CLASSES FORMING NOW Call 696-3196 •mention this ad when you register and recive a free gift. CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) — Ifyou eat a normal American diet, you eat about a pound of bugs a year. Your gut reaction may be one of nausea. But the truth is, says an Ore gon State University entomologist, they're not bad for you. Dried cater pillar larvae, for example, have more protein than an equal amount of dried beef. Associate Professor Michael Bur- gett says bits and pieces of insects are unavoidable in such staples as pea nut butter, potatoes and tomato juice. So since we eat insects anyway, we should give up our demands for per fect produce, which would end heavy use of chemicals and pesti cides. Besides, he says, a steaming plate of bamboo worm larvae is consid ered a delicacy in some parts of the world. Burgett illustrates his point to his students. Falling back on culinary se crets he learned while doing re search around the world, he whips up some tasty dishes — and encour ages the students to try them. “There’s always a lot of interest in my insect dishes,” Burgett says. “They look, smell and taste good. But I can’t really say I’ve made a lot of dietary converts.” In many countries, insects are common food staples. Burgett says many native cultures in South Amer ica include insects in their diets, as do hunter-gatherer societies, such as the Australian aborigines. Eskimos eat head lice during mu tual grooming rituals, he says, and some American Indian tribes of the western United States had native dishes of fly pupae. “But we’re not talking about an appetite for insects only in the dis tant past or among remote South American tribes,” Burgett says. “In some modern, more devel oped nations such as Thailand, vir tually everyone eats some type of in sects. You buy them in the supermarket like milk and eggs.” While doing research in Thailand, Burgett sampled some unusual fare. A giant waterbug — two inches long, one inch tall and roasted — is a local favorite. T he larvae and pupae of ants also add zest to an omelette. A fine restaurant in Bangkok might offer insect dishes in season, Burgett says, just as a good Ameri- I here’s always a lot of interest in my insect dishes. They look, smell and taste good. But I can’t really say I’ve made a lot of dietary converts.” — Michael Burgett, entomologist can eatery would offer shad roe in early spring or fresh strawberry shortcake in June. And, according to him, the coun try’s thriving silk industry offers a fringe benefit for connoisseurs — silkworm pupae “taste great and are quite nutritious.” If you’re interested in trying some insect dishes, Burgett says, just gat her a bunch of your favorite bugs — ants, grasshoppers, whatever — dry them in a warm oven, grind them in a blender and use them as a flour substitute for almost any rec ipe, especially cookies. Burgett’s favorite recipe for his student banquets is bakuti, delicacy of Nepal. “Bakuti is based on the larvae and pupae in a honeybee comb,” Burgett says. “It’s full of protein and sort of looks like a scrambled egg when it’s done. “In Nepal, they like their honey bee products so much that special climbers risk their lives to harvest the hives of giant honeybees, which are usually found on steep cliffs.” To appease the American palate, Burgett mixes the bakuti with cream cheese and serves it on a Triscuit. The motivation for the special menu and his lectures on dietary in sects in quite serious: Americans need to accept the fact that their food is grown in a real world full of very real bugs. And, Burgett says, our insistence on pristine products can exact a high environmental price. Burgett says his dream is for envi ronmental groups to start lobbying the federal government for larger allowable quantities of insects in our foods. That might permit farmers to use more sustainable, healthy agricultu ral practices with less reliance on chemicals and pesticides, he says. If we can’t overcome our squea mishness, he says, consider God’s ad vice to Aaron and Moses in Leviticus 11:22, King James version: “Even these of them, ye may eat; the locust after his kind, and the bald locust after his kind, and the beetle after his kind, and the grass hopper after his kind.” Entrepreneur making future heirlooms AMARILLO (AP) — Charlene Bulls never received formal training in business management. But somewhere along the way, the Panhandle entre preneur learned an important business basic — find out what the public wants to buy, and sell it to them in large quantities. Transferring photographs to cloth via her own pat ented process is the latest venture Bulls is offering to the public. The idea seems to be a hit, she said, and Bulls is gearing up for a business expansion. Bulls turns photographs, drawings and paintings into one-color or full-color prints on lightweight muslin squares the size of sheets of typing paper for use in quilting projects. She also makes iron-on transfers for T-shirts or other handcrafts. The copy process, done with modified office copying machines, can be used for one-of-a-kind items, Bulls said. A person with an exclusive drawing or photo graph can have an exclusive T-shirt or fabric wall hang- ing. Members of small organizations who want club T- shirts can design a logo and have a sfnall number of transfers printed without investing in large quantities. Quilting seems to be the biggest field for using the ropy process, Bulls said. Customers are making unique family heirloom quilts using prints of family pictures, wedding announcements, birth announcements and other memorabilia. “We’re making antiques for the year 2090,” Bulls said. Dyed-in-the-cotton quilters who want to make quilts the old fashioned way can buy fabric with cutting lines printed on the fabric. For quilters who have lost some mobility in their hands, Bulls sells cut pieces. For people who don’t have much time to devote to quilting, Bulls sells quilting kits containing iron-on quilt pieces that are then covered with sheer fabric and ? |uilted with a simple running stitch. All kits utilize her abric printing innovation. Bulls discovered the copy process when she owned a factory in Spearman in the early 1980s, in which she and a staff of 16 made wooden furniture pieces that had handmade, quilted insets on the fronts. Bulls said the patterns that the workers used to trace the designs for the insets onto fabric would wear out af ter repeated use. “What may have started out as a flower might look like a circle after a while,” Bulls said. Bulls was then cashing in on the popularity of “ho memade” and “country" looks for interior decorating. Her factory was producing furniture with appliqued or pieced-quilt inlays to be shipped all over tne United States, and Bulls developed a fast and accurate way to transfer the cutting lines to fabric using her copying machine. “It just occurred to me that we could use the copier to print photos on fabric,” she said. After a few adjust ments to the machine, and a lot of experimenting to make the color adhere to the fabric permanently, Bulls began selling the fabric photographs. In 1986 Bulls applied for a patent on the photo printing process and received it in 1988. She opened Fabric Fotos and Quilt Factory in Amarillo last year. Bulls says she is just getting started in the new ven ture. She has been selling the fabric photographs through mail order catalogs. She is now retailing the products from her store in Amarillo. “I’m trying to create a track record in the retail busi ness,” Bulls said, explaining that she is establishing a re tail outlet foundation for a franchise chain that she may develop later. CHECK 'EM OUT AGGIES!! The Summer & Fall Class Directories are out. Check out the advertising in the back of the books. There are a lot of bargains for students . . . Discounts . . . Special Rates . . . Coupons .... 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